Tongan Pita Taufatofua keeps his shirt on and is happy just to finish 15km cross-country skiing race at Winter Olympics

Finishes 33 minutes behind gold medalist Dario Cologna in Pyeongchang but is proud to have competed in event.

Morocco's Samir Azzimani (L) congratulates Tonga's Pita Taufatofua after he crossed the finish line during the men's 15km cross country freestyle at the Alpensia cross country ski centre during the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games on February 16, 2018 in Pyeongchang.  / AFP PHOTO / FRANCK FIFE
Powered by automated translation

The "shirtless" Tongan, all covered up to keep warm this time, had only one thought as he maneuvered around the final downhill turn and headed toward the finish line.

The Olympic cross-country skier said to himself, "not in front of everyone. Don't give me my first fall."

Pita Taufatofua made it to the finish line, all right, and he did it before they closed the course for the night — the other of his two fears heading into the event.

The man who has marched shirtless and oiled up in the last two Olympics — summer and winter — was not even last in Friday's race. Taufatofua was, however, near the back in 114th place out of 116 finishers, about 33 minutes behind gold medalist Dario Cologna. And that was just fine by him.

"I would rather finish toward the end of the pack with all of my friends than somewhere in the middle by myself," said Taufatofua, who took up the sport last year after competing in taekwondo at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. "We fought together, we finish together."

____________________

Read more

Yun Sung-bin becomes first male Asian athlete to win a sliding medal at Winter Olympics

Best helmets in the men's skeleton at PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Games - in pictures

Colombian speed skaters finding conditions tough at Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang

____________________

Taufatofua and several others, like 43-year-old German Madrazo of Mexico, literally went around the world to qualify for the Winter Games, forging tight friendships along the way in pursuit of a common goal.

They tried cross-country qualifying races in Armenia, Poland, Turkey and Austria. And failed.

Finally, they traveled to Iceland and made it in the last qualifying race before the Pyeongchang Games, spending nearly every last penny they had to reach their Olympic dream.

"Pita and I spent two months, fighting and fighting every day," Madrazo said. "One day we were completely out of money and we had one last chocolate bar. There was nothing left and we split that chocolate bar and said, 'Well brother, we live to fight another day.'"

Madrazo had to call home to Mexico to get a flight back from Iceland, having only bought a one-way ticket because that was all he could afford. His story is not unique.

The 15-kilometre freestyle is the United Nations of cross-country skiing races. There was Kequyen Lam of Portugal, Sebastian Uprimny of Colombia and Klaus Jungbluth Rodriguez of Ecuador among the late finishers after most of the crowd had left. Syed Human of Pakistan and Samir Azzimani of Morocco were there, too.

None of them are elite cross-country skiers, but they were all eager to represent their country at the Pyeongchang Games.

The work those men put in to qualify for the Olympics was not lost on Cologna, a three-peat gold medalist in the event.

"I think it's good to have many skiers from many countries here," Cologna said. "I think we have around 60 nations. I suppose we are fighting for medals here, but it is good to feel this Olympic spirit. We have had a lot of bad news (in the world) recently, so it's good to keep up this Olympic spirit."

Madrazo was the last competitor to cross the finish line, proudly waving a Mexican flag he grabbed as he was heading to the homestretch.

As he crossed, Taufatofua was there to greet him with a hug.

"Today, Pita and I hugged and said again, 'We live to fight another day,'" Madrazo said. "It made me cry. It was the best feeling ever."